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RAW notes
It may be said that CHDK owes it's existence to the desire for saving RAW in RAW barren Powershot cameras. By inspired work on the Firm update procedure with these cameras, it was discovered that RAW was actually a disabled function of the original firmware, and with further genius, enabling RAW saving and other functions saw the beginnings of the CHDK.
The name RAW actually suggests that this is a file without any changes straight from the camera's sensor, and with CHDK this is the case. In some cameras this is not the case, some have had some kind of processing such as sharpening, adding of a header file, Exif data, compression, and even white balance, it could be suggested even unknown processing (except to the manufacturer).
The belief that the RAW file will contain more depth or digital information is the motivator for saving RAW, so that in processing, more digital information is available to work with.
Most RAW enabled cameras save as 12 bits per pixel or 14 bits per pixel whereas CHDK is 10 or
12 bpp, depending on the camera model, this is still far more than the 8 bit JPEG depth, This means you can make a wider range of adjustments without compromising picture quality.
RAW is therefore a powerful option that most advanced digital cameras make available to photographers who do not want the camera to apply any
RAW data takes longer to write to a memory card and there is a need to
reproduction of a subject, or you want optimum control over sharpness, contrast, saturation; Many photographers are finding that they do want the control that RAW gives them.
With some cameras, and also with CHDK, you can have the advantage of saving RAW and JPEG, this means having the option to just keep the RAWs that you need for optimum processing, or otherwise just keeping the JPEGs if you are pleased with the camera's processing.
For many, saving in JPEG is more than adequate. JPEG files are compressed, and, compared to RAW, they are smaller, save faster, and more images can fit on a memory card. Many professional photographers shoot at the highest JPEG image quality. Remember also RAW can be disabled for certain shooting conditions, see the RAW parameters menu for “Disable RAW @ burst” etc.
There is no single RAW format; formats can be similar or radically different. Different manufacturers use their own proprietary and typically undocumented formats, which are collectively known as RAW format. The DNG (Adobe) format has been put forward as a possible universal standard.
Processing CHDK RAW is possible using a number of available applications, particularly
Recently it has been recommended to use the in camera DNG conversion, producing a widely compatible DNG image file, recognized by the popular image editors. Using the DNG format also has the advantage of downloading over USB, including the Exif data from the corresponding JPEG.